Dr. Thomas Jefferson Johnson, son of David
Johnson and his wife Mary Burch, was born February 15, 1801 in
Franklin County, Kentucky. He married Juliet Spencer Rankin,
daughter of Dr. Adam Rankin and his wife Elizabeth
Speed, in Henderson, Kentucky, February 15, 1827 on his 26th
birthday.

He settled in Henderson, Kentucky and became one of its best
doctors.

Paternal Grandmother

Juliet Spencer Rankin was born in Henderson,
Kentucky in 1799. Died in 1879 &endash; 80 years of age.

****

Paternal great grandfather

Dr. Adam Rankin, seventh son of William
Rankin was born in Franklin, Pa. In 1770. He married Elizabeth
Speed on November 1, 1792. They made Henderson, Kentucky their
home. He became a very famous physician.

John Audubon, the noted artist, lived in his home. The
Texas Johnson children had a copy of Audubon's fabulous "Bird Book",
which, alas, disappeared thru the years. Audubon Park, in Henderson,
Ky., was named for the great artist.

Paternal great Grandmother

Elizabeth Speed was born in Virginia February
7, 1774 and immigrated from Virginia to Kentucky coming over the
famous "Wilderness Road" with her father, Captain James Speed.
The journey was made by walking and horseback.

The Rankin "Crest", which the descendants of Dr. Adam
Rankin are privileged to use on stationary, etc., is on deposit
at Tiffany's, N.Y. The Rankin Coat of Arms is very beautiful: a
scarlet shield centered with silver, holding scarlet boars heads.

Glory painted mine from Burks Peerage and Heraldery.

****

Father

General Adam Rankin Johnson was born in
Henderson, Kentucky February 8, 1834. He came to Texas in 1854 when
20 years of age. For five years he surveyed school lands and
developed into manhood, an alert woodsman, highly intelligent, fine
shot and an expert horseman.

Returned to Kentucky in 1861 to join General N. B. Forrest
as confidential scout in the War Between the States. Rose rapidly in
rank. Colonel of 10th Kentucky Cavalry Partisan Rangers June 1, 1864.
Brigadier General of same troop Sept 6, 1864.
[photo]

Retired from active service after loss of his eyes at Grubbs Cross
Roads, Kentucky, March 23, 1865. Applied for amnesty and took the
oath of allegiance to the United States at Henderson, Kentucky, July
28, 1865. Returned to Texas, settling with his young wife,
Josephine, at Burnet. Amassed a small fortune in the land
business, built Marble Falls, Texas "The Blind Man's Town".
[photo]

Though blind, raised and educated 6 children with the capable,
tireless help of his wife, Josephine, whom he married prior to the
war on January 1, 1861. [photo]

Died October 17, 1922 aged 89 in Burnet, Texas. Was buried from
Senate Chamber in the State Capitol and rests in the State Cemetary,
the Arlington of Texas, among Texas illustrious dead. Governor Pat
M. Neff was an honorary pallbearer.

Mother

Maria Josephine Eastland Johnson was born in
Sparta, Tennessee, August 31, 1845. A magnificent, highly
intelligent, courageous woman, Josephine was a "Grande Dame of the
Old South." She possessed a gracious personality and made her home
attractive and delightful to her family and friends. It was her
tireless reading of history, fiction and theology that kept her
husband well informed. Josephine was an excellent reader and Adam's
happiest moments were when he was listening to her melodious voice.

Josephine's children and grandchildren loved her deeply and found
her a delightful companion.

Josephine died at her son's (Adam R. Johnson Jr.) home in
Austin September 11, 1923, and sleeps beside her husband.

****

Daughters of the Republic of Texas Ancestor; Maternal Grandfather

Robert Mosby Eastland was born in Sparta,
Tennessee in 1825. He received a grant of land from the Republic of
Texas in 1842.

He was one of the early educators of Texas, teaching at
Ruetersville College at Fayetteville, Texas.

He married Elizabeth (Eliza) Brazeale of Kingston, Roan
County, Tennessee in 1844. They came to Texas in 1845. Their children
were Maria Josephine and Fannie Margrave Eastland.

Robert Eastland died in 1851 with TB and is buried in the
old cemetery in LaGrange.

Maternal Grandmother

Elizabeth (Eliza) Brazeale was born in
Kingston, Roan County, Tennessee November 15, 1827, the daughter of
John WoodsMcNary Brazeale and his wife, Elizabeth
Margrave. After the death of Robert Eastland, Eliza
married a rich planter (a Mr.Hill) in Fayetteville,
Texas, and Josephine and Fannie were raised with his
daughter, Lenora.

Eliza later married a third time, Emanuel Sampson, a
merchant in Burnet, Texas.

Eliza Sampson died in Burnet December 29, 1904 and is
buried in the old cemetery there.

****

Maternal Great Grandfather; United
States Daughters of 1812 Ancestor

John Woods McNary Brazeale was born in
Kingston, Roan County, Tennessee in 1795. He was a prominent lawyer.
In 1842 he wrote a book, "Life As It Is," a history of East
Tennessee. He married Elizabeth Margrave in Roan County,
Tennessee, Feb. 5, 1824.

He served in the War of 1812 as a Sergeant in Captain Allen S.
Bacon's Company, Brown's Regiment, East Tennessee Volunteers,
from September 30 to December 30, 1813.

He died in Jasper, Tennessee in 1843.

Maternal Great Grandmother

Elizabeth Margrave Brazeale came with her
daughter, Elizabeth (Eliza) and her husband Robert Mosby
Eastland to Texas in 1845. She settled with her family in Burnet,
Texas.

Her family was 5 sons and 2 daughters: Jefferson, Harrison,
Frank, Clint, Columbus, Elizabeth, and Sarah.

****

Paternal Great Grandfather, five times
removed

John Speed of England, the "Great Historian",
geographer and antiquarian, was born in Farrington, in the county of
Cheshire, England in 1552.

He lived in London, and his life's great work was the history of
England and maps of England and Wales. His Table of Scripture
Genealogy were published in the first editions of the King James
translations of the Bible. In them, the author shows by "chain like"
trail the descent of Adam thru Noah, Shem, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob
and David and a continuous line to the Virgin Mary.

King James gave to John Speed patents to these tables, securing
them to him and his heirs and it is probable that John Speed was
knighted by King James for his work as in England he was called "Sir
John Speed."

Note: There is a first edition of the King James Bible in the Wenn
Library in the University of Texas which contains the John Speed
tables of Scripture Genealogy. This Bible is valued at $150,000.

Speed's history of England was first published in 1611 in a
splendid folio volume, bound in red morocco. Speed's history was
pronounced by the learned men of his time as the most complete ever
written.

John Speed married Susan Draper and had 18 children,
all of them becoming Oxford graduates. He lived with his sweet
"Susana" 57 years.

John Speed was b uried in the Chancel of the Church of Saint
Giles, Cripplegate, London, where afterwards, the poet John Milton
was laid.

The portrait I have of John Speed is a copy of the one that hangs
in the British Museum in London, England.

The Speed Coat of Arms is a swallow É[some text missing.]

****

Paternal Great Grandfather; Four times
removed

The first Speed. James Speed was the son of
Dr. John Speed, Mayor of Southampton, England, born at Oxford,
elected a scholar of Saint John's College in 1643. In 1666 he took
his degree of Doctor of Medicine. He was an Oxford graduate, eminent
physician and playwrite. He died in 1640 and is buried in the Chapel
at Oxford.

****

Paternal Great Grandfather; Three Times
Removed

James Speed, son of Dr. John Speed of
Southampton, England, was born in England September 28, 1679. He came
to American in 1695, settling in the County of Surrey, on the South
side of the James River, opposite Williamsburg, Virginia. He was a
pioneer in the early times of the old Dominion, just as his grandson,
Captain James Speed, was in Kentucky. He became a tobacco
raiser, one of the best.

In fifteen years, he was independently wealthy enough to get
married. He married Mary Pulley September 6, 1711. They had
four sons: James, John, William and Thomas.

He died March 15, 1719. Mary Pulley Speed died June 3,
1733.

****

Paternal Great Grandfather; Twice
Removed

John Speed, second son of James Speed and
Mary Pulley was born February 5, 1714 in Mechlenburg County,
Virginia. He married a widow, Mary Taylor, October 6, 1737, in
Surrey County Virginia. They were married 45 years when she died July
1, 1782.

John Speed died March 8, 1785, aged 71 years. He was a man
of large wealth and one of the most influential and substantial
citizens of his part of the old Dominion.

John Speed and Mary Taylor had seven sons and four
daughters.

****

Paternal Great Grandfather; Once
removed

Daughters of the American Revolution
Ancestor

Captain James Speed, son of John Speed and
Mary Taylor was born March 4, 1739 in Mechlenburg County,
Virginia. He married Mary Spencer December 10, 1767 in
Charlotte County, Virginia. They had six children: Thomas, Mary,
John, Elizabeth and Henry (twins) and Julia.

Captain James Speed was in Colonel Cocke's Virginia
Militia. On March 15, 1781, at Guilford's Court House he was wounded
in the left side by a ball which destroyed two or three of his small
ribs.

Captain James Speed made the trip to Kentucky over the
famous "Wilderness Road." This road was charted by the hunters of
thay day and led thru the mountains of Virginia to Cumberland Gap and
thru the levellands of Kentucky by way of Rockcastle, Crab Orchard
and Danville. The trip was made by walking and horseback. The country
was a wilderness infested by Indians.

Captain James Speed was well educated, had strong business
sense and great energy. He had ready wit and wrote well. Some of his
poems were in the school books of Kentucky.

He was one of the early judgers of Kentucky. He acquired large
tracts of land. He was a member of the early Kentucky conventions of
May 1783 to 1787. He was also a member of the "Political Club" made
up of the leading men of the state.

Captain James Speed died September 3, 1811, aged 72 years.
His widow, Mary Taylor Speed, died March 5, 1829.

Thomas B. Eastland, son of William and Mary
Eastland of Woodford County, Kentucky, was born in Virginia, but
lived as a boy in Kentucky. He was Quartermaster General under
General William Harrison of Kentucky during the War of 1812.
He held a commission as first lieutenant of Infantry in the U.S. Army
and his commission was signed by John Adams, dated 1801.

After the War of 1812 he lived in Nashville, Tennessee. He was
awarded fabulously rich land grants in the coal mines of that state
by General Andrew Jackson for his part in the Battle of New
Orleans and other engagements. Being a man of fine business ability,
he amassed a large fortune.

In 1821 he moved to Sparta, Tennessee to a palatial plantation
located at the famous Bon Aire Springs, which he bought in 1801.

He married Nancy Mosby at her father's home "Wood Farm" in
Woodford County, Kentucky. They had six children, five sons and one
daughter. They were: James W. and Nickolos Washington (twins),
Robert Mosby (our grandfather), William Mosby and Thomas B.
and a daughter Maria.

In later life, Thomas B. Eastland moved to a new home,
"Clifty" on the top of the Cumberland Mountains. Due to his
distinguished service to his county and state, the name was changed
to "Eastland." It is on the Knoxville to Nashville highway. His
neighbors were Andrew Jackson, John Sevier, James K. Polk and
other notables.

A painting of General Andrew Jackson and his staff,
Colonel Coffee and Lieutenant Thomas B. Eastland hangs
in the Hermitage.

Thomas B. Eastland died in 1860 and is buried on a knob
near his home.

Maternal Great Grandmother

Nancy Mosby was the daughter of John
Mosby of Woodford County, Kentucky, who reprersented Fayette
County in the Virginia Legislature in 1782. He resided in that part
of Fayette that became Woodford County, Kentucky. In 1800 the census
reported him as owner of a farm (probably Wood Farm) and three slaves
and a family of 13 members.

Eastland County, Texas organized in 1873 was named for Captain
William Eastland, Texas Ranger and early patriot. He participated
in the Battle of Mier, was captured by the Mexicans, drew a black
bean and was shot. "Thank God death has no terrors for me," were his
last words.

The gorgeous Eastland Monument on Monument Hill at La Grange,
Texas was erected in his memory.

****

The Rankin Family

Adam Rankin, Landed Gentry of Scotland and
Ireland

Paternal Great Grandfather

During the massacre of Glencoe, when the ruling of
death for all male children was made, a mother dressed her four
little boys as girls and made her escape to England. She changed
their names at once from Macfhraing to Rankin.

One son, William, at young manhood immigrated to America
and settled in Franklin County, Pa., many years before the American
Revolution. William was the son of Adam Rankin, landed
proprietor of Scotland and Ireland. He was the only son of Adam
Rankin to seek his fortune in the United States. He prospered and
raised a family of seven sons and one daughter.

The Macfhraings, later Rankins, lived in Scotland in
the 12th century. Here their names meant "son of a Frenchman",
indicating that the head of the clan came over with William the
Conqueror in our earliest intercourse with France.

The Rankin Line:

Adam Rankin son of Jeremiah, son of Adam
Rankin (born in 1688), son of William, son of Alexander
Rankin of Scotland.

****

Will You Love

By General Adam Rankin Johnson, Written in 1860

Will you love? I ask the maiden
Beaming bright in beautie's sky,
Love you know and with it laden
Are the arrows in your eye:
Blushes soft come o'er you stealing,
Low your words of music fall.
Love's a strange delicious feeling
What it is I cannot tell.

What is love O, brightest angel?
Wilt thou not thyself unfold?
So, I feel thy soft eve &endash; angel
Stir the waters of my soul.
Love is a joy divinely given
To the souls of earth again.
Binding heart to earth and heaven
By love's own electric chain.